ALBANY, NY – RITE-supported Plaintiffs are appealing their challenge to New York’s mail-in voting law to the New York Court of Appeals, arguing that a constitutional amendment is needed to change voting rules.
“RITE is extremely disappointed in the court’s decision holding that New York can implement no-excuse mail-in voting without a constitutional amendment. Since 1865 and up to 2022, New York’s officials consistently and uniformly told the citizens of this state that they could not expand voting to new populations without a constitutional amendment. Consistent with this well-settled legal background, every time New York has expanded voting, it has amended its constitution to allow for it.
“Two years ago, New Yorkers were asked if they wanted to amend their constitution to eliminate all restrictions on voting and authorize no-excuse absentee voting. By an overwhelming margin, they said no.
“According to the most recent decision, it was only for a show. The reason: New Yorkers had already amended their constitution in 1966 to allow for no-excuse absentee voting. Never mind that in 2022, their elected representatives, including those celebrating today’s decision, told the people that no-excuse absentee voting could not be implemented unless they approved the proposed amendment. According to the court, that was not true. Those who thought they were actually voting for something of consequence—and participating meaningfully in the democratic governance of their state—were mistaken. The joke was on them. The real truth, according to the court, is that it did not matter at all whether they voted for the amendment or against it. No-excuse absentee voting could be implemented either way. Although no one had noticed, that constitutional question had been decided more than six decades ago!
“The recent decision sends a strong message to the citizens of New York that their voices and their votes do not matter one bit. What matters in New York is raw power. In what is supposed to be a democratic government, that’s more than a shame. It’s a tragedy. RITE looks forward to an appeal.”
– Derek Lyons, President of RITE
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